N Nothing Else Measures Up. Friday Night Fun: Israeli Problem NECHEMIA MEYERS SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS A Introducing Volkswagen EuroVan. An all- new mid-sized van with 35% more space behind the front seats than the average minivan. More headroom, more legroom, wider seats, larger cargo area. Front- wheel drive. A distinctly European ride. Try one on for size. ArimoresAllVairamr FAHRVERGNOGEN Suburban VOLKSWAGEN AT THE TROY MOTOR MALL Phone: (313) 649-2300 EASY TO FIND ... On Maplelawn off Maple Rd. Between Crooks & Coolidge If you are not wearing it . . .sell it! You can't enjoy jewelry if it's sitting in your safe deposit box. Sell it for immediate cash. We pur- chase fine gems. Diamonds and Gold Jewelry. A SERVICE TO PRIVATE OWNERS, BANKS & ESTATES GEM/DIAMOND SPECIALISTS THE DETRO 118 30400 Telegraph Rd. Suite 134 Bingham Farms 642 5575 Hours: Fine Jewelers EST. 1919 Lawrence M. Allan, President DAILY 10-5:30 THURS. 10-7 SAT. 10-3 SANSABELT slacks at a sensible price. Why pay more when we offer them at discount? We even include FREE tailoring. 'Discount prices start at: $ AWARDED CERTIFICATE BY GIA IN GRADING & EVALUATION 0 ~We did GET YOUR NEXT PAIR OF - 3 plenty of free parking behind our store sizes 32-60 JOHN R MEN'S WEAR 543-4646 M-Th 9:30-6:30, Fri. & Sat. 9:30-8, Sun. 11-5 IP mile • Job. It Take l-75 to 9 Mile lmost three-quarters of Israeli movie houses screen films on Friday night, much to the distress of Orthodox elements. Such elements — which feel that public entertainment on the Sabbath undermines the Jewish character of the Jewish state — have 'been fighting a fierce rear-guard battle against the screenings, most recently in the coastal town of Ashkelon, south of Tel Aviv. There, until now, cinemas have not operated on the eve of the Sabbath, but the management of a new mall has announced that its complex of theaters will be open on Friday night. Having failed to force a municipal ban on the screenings, Or- thodox rabbis have called on their adherents to boycott all the shops in the mall "because of its decision to brutally trample upon our most sacred values." Boycotts and political pressure have sometimes worked, as is the case in my own town of Rehevot. Most often, however, they have not, even in Orthodox strongholds like Jerusalem. In the summer of 1986, when Sabbath screenings in the Holy City first became a public issue, not a single Jerusalem cinema operated on Friday night. Now 51.5 percent of them do. The changeover in Tel Aviv and Haifa is hardly less dramatic. Whereas six years ago only a limited number of movie houses there were open on the eve of the Sabbath, to- day just a single cinema re- mains dark in each one. As might be expected, a large percentage of Friday evening movie fans are teen- agers, though their parents, in many cases, would prefer that they stayed home in order to avoid the danger of Friday night accidents. Such accidents are primari- ly the fault of the 20,000 youngsters who are out on the road that evening, driving either their family car or, if they have rich and indulgent parents, one of their own. Not all kids, of course, are reckless, but many, anxious to impress their friends, will disregard the speed limit, cross from one lane to another without warning, take cor- ners on two wheels and other- wise flirt with death. Efforts are constantly being made to curb this phenomenon. For example, people receiving their first license must, for two full years, carry a little yellow sign on their car's back wind- shield which proclaims: "new driver." And, in addition, teen-agers as a whole are bar- red from the roads between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m. Yet the fact remains — an appalling 45 percent of all Friday night accidents are caused by reckless kids. Religious Israelis are apt to say "I told you so," and to point out that their own children are not numbered among the victims of this motorized slaughter. Such preaching, however, clearly doesn't affect the attitude of Israel's secular majority. They go on demanding that movie houses and other places of entertainment be open on (-- Friday night, and, to an ever- increasing extent, they are getting their way. ❑ Pilot's Body Identified Tel Aviv (JTA) — The body of Capt. Yitzhak Fuchs, pilot of the El Al cargo plane which crashed in Amster- dam last week, was iden- tified there by Israeli foren- sic experts working with Netherlands investigation teams. His body, together with that of the plane's flight en- gineer, Gedalyah Sofer, previously identified, was to be flown back to Israel later this week for burial here. The body of 1st Officer Ar- non Ohad has not yet been identified, but the funerals of the two men identified, and a joint memorial service for the three El Al members, was expected to be held early next week. The funeral of Anat Levy Salomon, wife of an El Al security official in Amster- dam, was held in the Holon cemetery. She had been returning to Israel as the plane's sole passenger when it crashed.